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Ascend wrote:Very easy to read and understand, I take my hat off to you.
Slothrop wrote: And since there's enough stuff in music theory to take up a decent length university course, the stuff you pick up in half an hour on the web will probably only describe a fairly limited set of the most commonly used options."
Hugh wrote:quick question - what are the general rules about going from one scale to the next? Would I be able to move from a C major scale to any other major scale, and are there any rules about moving from a minor to a major scale?
cheers bro ur help is much appreciated
kindofblue272 wrote:Slothrop wrote: And since there's enough stuff in music theory to take up a decent length university course, the stuff you pick up in half an hour on the web will probably only describe a fairly limited set of the most commonly used options."
A decent length university course? One can get a graduate degree in the subject ... Schenker's analysis of Beethoven's Ninth is like 700 pages long ...
Hugh wrote:quick question - what are the general rules about going from one scale to the next? Would I be able to move from a C major scale to any other major scale, and are there any rules about moving from a minor to a major scale?
cheers bro ur help is much appreciated
Slothrop wrote:It's good info (from your mum), although keep in mind the word "likely" - if you've already got an idea in mind and it doesn't fit into one of those categories then there's probably a more obscure category that it does fit into so go with it and worry about keys and scales later.
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